AUS Tertiary Update Vol.5.No.2, 7 February 2002
AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 2 , 7 February
2002
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In
our lead story this week…..
THE YEAR AHEAD
The new
Association of University Staff National President, Grant
Duncan, says the prospect of strike action by staff at six
of the country's seven university is a reflection of the
frustration felt by university staff over many years. In a
speech in Wellington, Dr Duncan pointed out that salary
offers had yet again been below reasonable expectations. He
predicted that with an increase in staff/student ratios, and
hence workloads, universities would face "grave
difficulties" in recruiting and retaining staff of an
international calibre unless the situation changed.
Referring to the changes currently underway in tertiary
education policy, Dr Duncan said he hoped these would result
in real improvements to the quality and international
standing of New Zealand university education and research,
and in tangible benefits to all university staff. "We must
acknowledge that policy reforms can only succeed if they
respect and support the personnel who staff the institutions
that delivery the goods." He also called for "all forms of
knowledge" to be valued – not just science and engineering –
"as essential components of the strategy to improve out
society and to remain in step with a rapidly changing
world". While universities earned export income and produced
many profitable commercial spin-offs they represented more
than an economic asset. 'They are complex organisations
which sustain a huge wealth of diverse knowledge," he said.
In his speech, Dr Duncan also paid tribute to the support
and dedication of the small staff at AUS and to the union's
Executive Director, Rob Crozier, who retires in the middle
of this year after 22 years with AUS and its forerunner the
Association of University Teachers. Replacing him would, Dr
Duncan said, be "one of the most significant decisions that
the Association will make for some time to come".
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
Auckland to go it alone with
titles?
8%er returns next week
New 'visits' fund
established
Controversy over targeted research plan
British academics seek 13% pay rise
Candour a thing
of the past?
AUCKLAND TO GO IT ALONE WITH
TITLES?
Auckland University has circulated a discussion
paper proposing to change its system of academic titles from
the current one based on the U.K. approach, to a U.S. system
of assistant, associate and full professor. Critics will
point out for one university in New Zealand to have a
different system of academic titles from its seven
counterparts seems ridiculous. More important, however, is
the fact that the present system is entrenched in the
collective agreement for academic staff at Auckland. As a
result, any changes would be a matter of negotiation.
“Tertiary Update” notes the discussion document's paper’s
about ranges of rates and can't help wondering: Is this just
a backdoor way of introducing them?
8%ER RETURNS NEXT
WEEK
The 8%er – the other AUS electronic weekly
publication – will be back next week. This members’-only
publication will begin the countdown to the day of action on
Monday 4 March and keep members up to date with negotiations
around the campuses.
NEW 'VISITS' FUND ESTABLISHED
The
Ministry of Education has announced a new fund – the
International Education Visits Fund (IEVF) – to encourage
short visits overseas by New Zealand educators to publicise
New Zealand's export education industry, and to provide some
financial assistance to bring key education policy and
opinion makers to this country. The fund has been
established under the government's Export Education Strategy
to raise awareness of New Zealand education and
qualifications overseas and to help build relationships.
Under the fund, successful applicants will receive money
towards travel and living costs for speaking engagements,
missions and attendance at offshore forums. There will be
two funding rounds this year. Applications for the first
close on Friday 1 March. Applications should be sent to the
International Policy and Development Unit, Ministry of
Education, 45-47 Pipitea Street, P. O. Box 1666, Thorndon,
Wellington. More details can be found at
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/goto/international
WORLD
WATCH
CONTROVERSY OVER TARGETED RESEARCH PLAN
A row
has blown up in Australia over the federal government's plan
to direct one-third of the Australian Research Council's
grant money into four priority science areas – nano and
bio-materials, genome/phenome research, complex/intelligent
systems, and photon science and technology. The news that
the ARC would direct $170m. over five years to the four
areas has brought criticism that the result will be a
narrowing of the national research effort. Particularly
incensed are social sciences and humanities researchers.
The Academic of Humanities president, Professor Iain
McCalman is quoted as saying he was "disturbed" by the
decision to focus on science alone when his organisation had
put forward four areas it believed were of national
priority. "While no one would argue the importance of the
four [chosen] areas," Professor McCalman is quoted as
saying, "an enormous amount of money has been put on four
horses that they think will produce the goods." The
government says the move is a first step in a broader
process of national priority setting.
BRITISH ACADEMICS
SEEK 13% PAY RISE
British university lecturers are to
seek a 13% pay rise in a joint pay claim from the
Association of University Teachers (AUT) and the Natfhe. It
is the first time the two unions – which together represent
62,000 British academics – have made a joint pay claim.
They say the pay rise is needed to prevent a recruitment and
retention crisis that would prevent universities reaching
the government's target of 50% participation in university
education by 2010. As well as the 13% pay rise, the claim
also calls for a minimum starting salary of £24,000; a
professorial minimum of £42,000; a rise in hourly paid rates
by the same average as full-time salaries; and, action to
close the gender pay gap. The claim has yet to be endorsed
by the memberships.
CANDOUR A THING OF THE PAST?
A
report just issued in the United States has found that the
system of evaluating professors and students is one that
"fears candor". The report, "Evaluation and the Academy:
Are we doing the right thing?" was sponsored by the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. Its authors found that the
inflation of student grades, and uncritical letters of
recommendation for staff were harmful practices that
undermined fairness in higher education. The report's
authors conclude that grade inflation results from a more
"student-centred" faculty trained during the 1960s as well
as the increased use of student evaluations of staff. The
report gives the example of a study conducted at the
University of Washington that found that lecturers who gave
higher grades were more like to receive positive student
evaluations. The report is available at the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences' website at
http://www.amacad.org/publications/occasional.htm
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